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Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Posts Tagged ‘international-solidarity-movement’

NY Times Nonsense on Arrigoni Murder

Saturday, April 16th, 2011
vittorio arrigoni

Vittorio Arrigoni with Hamas leader, Ismail Haniya (Mohammed Saber/EPA)

The NY Times’ Israel correspondents, always eager to get in a shot against Hamas when they can, fill their report on the murder of Vittorio Arrigoni with nonsense and near-nonsense.  Of course, they published a picture of a bloodied Vittorio shortly before his death.  Better to dramatize his graphic murder and score a few points against the terrorism supposedly running rampant in Gaza.

Next is the claim that the murder makes Hamas look bad which you can see in the headline, Gaza Killing of Italian Activist Deals a Blow to Hamas:

That [the murder] raised embarrassing questions for Hamas about the security it says it has restored in the Palestinian coastal enclave since it ousted its secular rival, Fatah, in a short, factional war.

The only thing Hamas did that made it look bad is saying today that Israel may be to blame, which was genuinely a stupid comment.  But unlike NY Times reporters, most of the rest of the thinking world understands that Hamas didn’t kill this man who was dedicated to the Palestinian cause.  And also unlike NY Times reporters, most people understand that with Gaza under Israeli siege and not subject to the normal conditions under which much of the rest of the world lives, it can be exceedingly difficult to rein in the nutcases, hot-heads and murderous thugs among them.

What NY Times reporters won’t tell you, is that Israel itself has a great deal of difficulty restraining its own settler types who espouse homicidal political views and perpetrate similar acts of mayhem on a regular basis.  What makes it worse when it happens in Israel is that the authorities have neither the will nor the competence to capture and punish these violent thugs.  One thing you can be sure is that Hamas will eventually capture Arrigoni’s killers and they will face justice.  Though I hope it is not the form of justice meted out sometimes by the IDF to Palestinian militants suspected of murdering Israelis–at the barrel of a gun.

Note the near glee with which Isabel Kershner raises the specter of the threat to other international peace activists in the Arrigoni murder:

It also raises the specter of a growing boldness on the part of more extreme, virulently anti-Western Islamic groups in Gaza, which would pose a challenge not only to Hamas but to foreign activists promoting the Palestinian cause.

The only specter here is one raised by Israeli intelligence and ampified by reporters like those of the NY Times.  The group which murdered the Italian peace activist has few members and even less support among the population.  It is a rogue entity with which Hamas has been at war for over a year.  This group poses no threat whatsoever to Hamas.  But it does provide a PR bonanza for the Bibis of the world who can now point to the blood-thirsty scum supposedly thriving in the cesspool that is Gaza.  Of course, there will no mention that the very conditions brought on by the Israeli siege offer the sectarianism represented by these Islamist radicals a fertile breeding ground: joblessness, poverty, illness, hopelessness, prison conditions.  These are the conditions in which extremism and violence thrives.  If the siege ended the radical crazies would no longer have any recruiting ground.

The article contains the questionable claim that Rachel Corrie’s death discouraged other activists from coming to Gaza:

Although her death galvanized public opinion worldwide, it discouraged other activists from living and working in Gaza.

Israel killed Rachel Corrie and her death certainly didn’t discourage others from coming though it may’ve made them more cautious in the risks they took in confronting Israeli forces.

The only true statement in the article is the question the death raises for the upcoming series of flotillas making their way to Gaza to continue the campaign of breaking Israel’s siege.  It is true that activists around the world will question their commitment to a Gaza that contains such murderous thugs.  But I doubt it will have much of a negative effect.  If anything, it will cause Hamas to take better care of such activists to ensure their safety.

What this article proves is that the NY Times hasn’t a clue what is going on in Gaza.  Partly this is because they don’t assign a correspondent there who has the authority to report there on a par with the authority and seniority of Ethan Bronner in Israel.  Partly, it’s because they wear ideological blinders.  They see what they want to see and disregard the rest.

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Italian Peace Activist Murdered in Gaza

Thursday, April 14th, 2011

“A man does what he has to do, whatever the personal consequences, whatever the obstacles, the dangers or the pressure. This is the basis of all human morality. (Giovanni Falcone)*

vittorio arrigoni

Vittorio Arrigoni with girl in Gaza

I don’t know how to write this post.  There are some things about this conflict that make no sense.  There are some things about this conflict that are just plain evil.  Today, Hamas security forces found the body of Vittorio Arrigoni, an International Solidarity Movement activist, in an abandoned house in Gaza.  He’d been kidnapped by a Salafist group, whose leader had been arrested by Hamas last month.  The kidnappers said Vittorio would be killed if their leaders wasn’t released, and by God, they were true to their word.

Vittorio arrived in Gaza in 2008 aboard a boat bringing humanitarian supplies and attempting to break Israel’s Gaza blockade.  He was utterly dedicated to the cause of Palestinian freedom.

Does it make sense to kill a family of five in Itamar, including babies?  Does it make any sense to kill an Italian pacifist who devoted his life to the Palestinian cause?  Does it make any sense to kill a gifted Israeli-Palestinian theater director dedicated to using culture to fight for Palestine?  What kind of world do these killers want?  Do they want to eat their own young like some wild animals?  Do they want to return the human race to darkness?

Vittorio’s killers, what can one say about them?  Let these odious people speak for themselves and let the world judge for itself regarding what they represent:

“The Italian hostage entered our land only to spread corruption.” It described Italy as “the infidel state.”

What do these people want?  That Palestinians should eat locusts and live in caves?  Would that satisfy them?  Do they think anyone will care for the Palestine they envision?  Or Muslim Caliphate or whatever?  They are beasts.  I don’t know which emotion I should give freer reign: rage or sorrow.

Of course, the Israeli far-right will be dancing the hora with this news.  It will be plastered in big headlines across Rotter, Debka Files and the like, not to mention the nutcase blogs we all know.  This will confirm every prejudice they hold, reinforce every fear every Israeli might have.  It doesn’t matter that the Salafists are a tiny group within Gaza.  It doesn’t matter that Hamas has waged implacable battle against them before and killed many of their members.  In situations like this people don’t look for nuance.  They see blood and blood speaks louder than words or thought.

* Thanks to Lawrence of Cyberia for quoting this “Thought of the Day” at Vittorio’s blog, Guerilla Radio.  May this quotation stand as a testament for the thoughtfulness, love and valor of international peace activists like Vittorio Arrigoni (Alav ha-shalom).  They cannot kill peace, they cannot kill love.  They can kill a man, but they cannot kill what he believes especially if others follow in his path.

I cannot ever remember crying while I wrote a post.  I am close to doing so now.

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IDF Declares Opposition to Zionism, Support for Palestinians ‘Revolutionary’ and Illegal

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Ariadna Jove Marti and Bridgette Chappell, ISM peace activists and dangers to the State and social order

Noam Sheizaf has a very good post about the small story involving two international peace activists working in Palestine who were arrested by the IDF and almost deported. They managed to lodge an appeal of their deportation and the government’s defense before the Supreme Court is sweeping, breathtaking and dangerous in the extreme.

What did the activisits do to deserve expulsion? Nothing. That is, no act. Not even words are cited. But their ideology and that of the International Solidarity Movement are cited as sufficient grounds for expulsion:

…The state said that Marti and Chappell belong to the International Solidarity Movement, an organization “that supports an ideology that is anti-Zionist, pro-Palestinian and universally revolutionary.”

The state maintained: “The organization’s activists are involved in activities against the security forces in areas of friction in Judea and Samaria and East Jerusalem.”

The two were “taking advantage of their tourist visas so they could participate in demonstrations in areas of friction…

Frankly, I don’t know whether the ISM takes any position on Zionism though it’s certainly pro-Palestinian. As for being “universally revolutionary,” this sounds straight out of the Joe McCarthy lexicon. I don’t even know what the phrase means, nor does the person who wrote it undoubtedly. But Alan Dershowitz would be proud and it’s a lie worthy of him.

It should also be noted that the ISM is absolutely non-violent. So when the government claims activists act against the security forces, whatever opposition they mount is non-threatening and pacifist in nature. Since when does a so-called western democracy need to be afraid of a few young people with pierced ears and ratty T-shirts (excuse the hyperbole) sitting in the road on behalf of Palestinian rights?

Noam raises another excellent point here:

It is, to the best of my knowledge, the first (but certainly not last) attempt to present criticism of Zionism or support for the Palestinian cause as illegal

I suppose the next step will be to make Israeli citizens culpable for similar views, which would then truly symbolize the death of Israeli democracy, which now is only on life-support.

Another important aspect of this case is that Israel claims that Area A around Ramallah, where the women were arrested, is wholly under Palestinian control. According to an agreement it signed, Israel has no right to exercise any control within this zone. Yet the IDF swooped down on a Palestinian-controlled area and arrested citizens of a foreign country. Under any other regime in the western world this would be state-sponsored kidnapping and viewed with outrage by the states whose citizens were apprehended. This being Israel, the nations do very little to oppose the violation of international agreements and the rights of their citizens.

Israel did something similar under Ehud Olmert when it entered Jericho, destroyed a prison and kidnapped Palestinian prisoners and transferred them to Israeli custody where they were promptly tried and imprisoned (Israel never heard of double-jeopardy I suppose).

Noam raises a good point asking what good any future Israeli peace agreement will be if it arrogates to itself the right to trespass on Palestinian territory virtually at will. In other words, and as I repeat endlessly here, this is a regime that does not believe in the rule of law. It uses the law when it suits its purposes (to expel the foreign activists) and ignores it when it suits (as it did when it pursued targeted assassinations in violation of a Supreme Court ruling).  Is it “universally revolutionary” to demand that Israel uphold the values of democracy in its own interactions with its citizens and neighbors?

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New York Theatre Workshop Drops ‘My Name is Rachel Corrie’ as Too Political

Saturday, March 4th, 2006

I was always under the impression that theater at its best was meant to provoke, challenge and even shock its viewers. In some of the greatest plays to grace the stage, we are presented with controversial, even outrageous ideas. That is what we expect. But apparently, the New York Theatre Workshop got more than it bargained for when it agreed to mount the Royal Court’s smash play, My Name Is Rachel Corrie for its New York debut this month.

Rachel Corrie murdered by IDF bulldozerRachel Corrie just before, and after being run down by IDF bulldozer (photo: ISM/AP)

Given, International Solidarity Moviement activisit Rachel Corrie, despite her tragic death, IS a controversial figure. Not everyone feel she died a hero’s death when an Israeli army tractor ran her down. Some people view her as an apologist for Palestinian terror. Given, New York City is home to the largest Jewish population outside of Tel Aviv. And many of them are ardent supporters of Israel who might’ve found this play distressing to say the least.

But since when is that reason to duck out on controversy with this pretentious and feeble excuse of a statement (as quoted in the NY Times):

The production, a hit at the Royal Court Theater in London last year, had been tentatively scheduled to start performances at the New York Theater Workshop in the East Village on March 22. But yesterday, James C. Nicola, the artistic director of the workshop, said he had decided to postpone the show after polling local Jewish religious and community leaders as to their feelings about the work.

“The uniform answer we got was that the fantasy that we could present the work of this writer simply as a work of art without appearing to take a position was just that, a fantasy,” he said.

In particular, the recent electoral upset by Hamas, the militant Palestinian group, and the sickness of Ariel Sharon, the Israeli prime minister, had made “this community very defensive and very edgy,” Mr. Nicola said, “and that seemed reasonable to me.”

Sound the buzzer on this guy–WRONG! Hamas’ victory and Sharon’s illness are absolutely FEEBLE excuses for running away from this play as fast as your little legs will carry you. If you use those as valid excuses, when would there ever be an appropriate time to mount a production? When the messiah comes? Then, of course there would be world peace and you wouldn’t need the play!

Here’s another jaw-dropping statement from the supposedly “fearless” artistic director:

“It seemed as though if we proceeded, we would be taking a stand we didn’t want to take,” he said.

In other words, if Nicola HAD produced Rachel Corrie he’d be forced to take a position defending the ideas she represented and he simply wasn’t prepared to do that. PATHETIC. Of course, when you produce a play you defend the ideas of the play’s subject. If that bothers you, then you can try to produce another play that represents the other side of the conflict. But don’t back out of Rachel Corrie because you can’t stand the heat of the debate. That’s an artistically bankrupt response to political conflict.

Nicola’s statement to Playbill is slicker but still distressing for those who believe in a theater of ideas:

“…I have worked to help our audiences and our community engage in an open and civil discourse on issues of our time. Our purpose for being is to create the most conducive place for these conversations; we have chosen the artists who lead these conversations with great care,” NYTW artistic director James C. Nicola told Playbill.com in a statement.

“We always try to minimize the distractions around the production so our constituency can hear the artist’s voice. This takes a great deal of planning and listening to accomplish. In the less than two months we had to mount the proposed production of the Royal Court’s My Name Is Rachel Corrie, we found that there was a strong possibility that a number of factions, on all sides of a political conflict, could use the production as a platform for their own agendas. We were not confident that we had the time to create an environment where the art could be heard independent of the political issues associated with it.”

The italicized portion of Nicola’s last sentence illustrates perfectly the tone-deaf nature of his understanding of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and this play in particular. Of course the art of My Name is Rachel Corrie can never be heard independent of the political issues involved precisely because Rachel Corrie was a political activist. Politics and this conflict were her life. She (at least in her own eyes) gave her life for her political ideas. If you cannot envision a production that embraces at least some of the ideas she represented then you don’t deserve the right to mount the play. You’d only make a bollocks of in the attempt. No wonder Alan Rickman is not returing Nicola’s phone calls.

So if I were Rickman, the fine actor and writer who created the play with Guardian journalist Katharine Viner, I’d say to good riddance to Nicola and NY Theater Workshop. Instead, look for New York theater folk who are ready to embrace this challenge and present this play to a New York audience, warts and all. It won’t be easy. As Nicola said, there will be extreme factional responses and controversy. People will picket your performances and God forbid some idiots might try even worse. But the world needs to learn more about Rachel Corrie and what she represented even if we disagree with her.

The blood of the Israelis and Palestinians killed in this conflict demands that the world take notice and try to do something to stop it. Rachel Corrie tried. Doesn’t New York, the alleged theater capital of the world, deserve to hear her words on stage??

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